How to Cook Pinto Beans in the Instant Pot

Learning how to cook pinto beans in the Instant Pot is a great and easy skill to know. Make perfect beans and enjoy them as a side dish or in entrees like chili or burritos!

It takes away a lot of the lengthiness of cooking dry beans from scratch because you don’t need to soak them and they can be done after just 35 minutes of cooking.

The Best Instant Pot Pinto Beans

This is such a great recipe to have on hand if you have an Instant Pot! Making pinto beans from scratch — or any beans for that matter — is often timely and involves an hours-long soaking period, but this is a no soak recipe which makes it so much faster and easier. I gave the option in the recipe card to include bay leaves, garlic, and onion in your Instant Pot if you are making the beans to enjoy as a side dish. This gives them a nice subtle Southern flavor profile, but if you are just using beans inside of another dish (like chili or a burrito), then feel free to skip these add-ins.

Another great thing: these beans are vegetarian! Beans are a great source of fiber and protein, making them a perfect addition to meatless meals and still ensuring you fill up your family. I love making any beans in the Instant Pot because, like most things made in the IP, it’s simplified and so much faster this way. I’d recommend storing the cooked beans in the fridge for up to 3 days, and then freezing them if you’d like to keep them longer!

Do I have to soak pinto beans before cooking?

No, not for this recipe! I’ve found that soaking beans before cooking them in an Instant Pot leads to split beans that fall apart during the cooking process.

Ingredients for this beans recipe

Pinto beans: dried beans of any kind could be made using this recipe.

Water: to soak and cook the beans.

Neutral oil: just a teaspoon, to ensure the beans don’t stick to each other or the pot.

Optional bay leaves, garlic, and onion: for added flavor.

Salt: to taste.

How to make Instant Pot pinto beans

Rinse and sort your pinto beans to make sure they all look normal.

Add the beans to the insert of your pressure cooker.

Add the water and the oil.

You can add an optional 3 bay leaves, 2 cloves of garlic (no need to peel), and a 1/2 an onion.

Place the lid onto the pressure cooker, and move the valve to sealing.

Adjust the pressure cooker to low pressure and set the timer for 35 minutes.

Tips for the best pinto beans

For added flavor: be sure to include the bay leaves, garlic, and onion.

For the best texture: cook them for 35 minutes, low pressure, and do a natural pressure release. This yields the best tender beans that keep their shape the best, but it’s slow (natural pressure release can take over and hour in itself). They tend to be a bit creamier in the centers too but don’t fall apart. If you have time, this is my favorite bean cooking method (works well for all the kinds of beans I have tried).

For best leftovers: freeze them if you plan on storing longer than 3 days. They get a “funky” smell if refrigerated longer, even if they haven’t gone bad.

What to serve with pinto beans

You can serve pinto beans as a side for a nutrient-rich and protein-packed side dish. They go well with barbecued meats, Mexican dishes, burgers and hot dogs, and inside of chilis, soups, burritos, and tacos!

How to store & reheat pinto beans

Store cooked pinto beans in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. You can store them frozen for much longer, up to 3 to 4 months. Reheat in a saucepan over medium heat until warmed through, or use in your favorite soup or other entree as is.

How to Cook Pinto Beans in the Instant Pot

Description

Learning how to cook pinto beans in the Instant Pot is a great and easy skill to know. Make perfect beans and enjoy them as a side dish or in entrees like chili or burritos!

Scale

Ingredients

1 pound (about 2.5 cups) dried pinto beans

8 cups of water

1 teaspoon neutral oil

3 bay leaves, 2 cloves garlic, 1/2 medium onion (all optional)

Salt, to taste

Instructions

Rinse and sort your pinto beans (this means make sure there aren’t any weird beans or rocks in the package).

Add the beans to the insert of your pressure cooker. You do NOT need to soak your beans before cooking.

Add the water and the oil.

You can add an optional 3 bay leaves, 2 cloves of garlic (no need to peel), and a 1/2 an onion if you’d like. These will add more flavor — great if you are eating these beans as a side. If you are just adding them to something like chili, you don’t really need to add the extras. It’s up to you. Just place them on top of the beans.

Place the lid onto the pressure cooker, and move the valve to sealing. Adjust the pressure cooker to low pressure and set the timer for 35 minutes*.

Once the cook time has elapsed, let the pressure cooker do a natural pressure release.

After the pressure cooker comes down from pressure, remove the lid. If you used the bay leaves, garlic, and onion, use a small spoon or tongs to carefully remove them, and discard.

Drain the extra water off the beans (I dump them into a colander or strainer and let them sit a minute so the extra water drains off well).

Add salt to taste if you’d like, and serve warm or use in your favorite recipes that call for canned beans. A scant 2 cups of beans is close to a 15-ounce can.

Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days or in the freezer for much longer.

Notes

In the picture, I quartered my onion, but it fell apart and was hard to get back out of the beans after they cooked. I would recommend not removing the root end of the onion, cutting it through root to stem, and leaving the half of the onion still all together (root end still attached). You’ll be able to remove it from the pot after cooking much easier.

*I feel like you have three cooking time options when it comes to beans in the Instant pot. First, you can cook them for 35 minutes, low pressure, and do a natural pressure release. This yields the best tender beans that keep their shape the best, but it’s slow (natural pressure release can take over and hour in itself). They tend to be a bit creamier in the centers too but don’t fall apart. If you have time, this is my favorite bean cooking method (works well for all the kinds of beans I have tried). Two, you can cook the beans for 50 minutes at low pressure and do a quick pressure release. This is faster and the beans are still tender and hold their shape. The third option is to cook them for 35 minutes on high pressure and do a quick pressure release. This is the fastest way, but you end up with a few beans that “blow out,” or split when cooking, and lose some of their shape. I feel like the end result is a little less consistent too, you’ll have a few over-cooked beans and a few barely under cooked beans. Great for making chili or refried beans, but my least favorite way to cook them when eating them as a side.

I don’t like to soak my beans before putting them in the Instant Pot. They tend to split and fall apart when I soak them first.

There’s something about beans — they don’t store in the fridge well. They seem to get “the funk” really quickly. You can store beans in the fridge for up to 3 days, but after that use them or move them to the freezer for longer storage. I portion out my beans into 1 to 2 cup servings and freeze them. Then I can pull them out as needed. They thaw and reheat well.

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deb c

Next time I cook some beans I will try the low pressure method….I’ve always done various beans on high pressure. Blow outs happen! Once cooled, I spread a single layer onto a cookie sheet and freeze for 4-6 hours. Now frozen, I can bag them up and store them in the freezer…..by freezing a layer at a time, the beans stay loose in the bag so its easy to scoop out what I need for recipes down the road. No more canned beans in this house!

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1 month ago

I’m Melissa, and I want to help you feed your family wholesome food.

As a hobby farmer and mom of five, I’m all about keeping it simple in the kitchen. I want healthy meals that feed my family well, and then I want to get back to my (messy) life. Let’s work together to find something yummy for your dinner table.

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